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<h1>Dave Dashaway</h1>
<h1>the Young Aviator</h1>
<h2>BY</h2>
<h2>ROY ROCKWOOD</h2>
<h2 id='chapI' class='c001'>CHAPTER I</h2>
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<div>DAVE DASHAWAY’S MODEL</div>
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<p class='c012'>“You don’t mean to say that new-fangled air
ship of yours will fly, Dave Dashaway?”</p>
<p>“No, it’s only a model, as you see.”</p>
<p>“Would the real one go up, though?”</p>
<p>“It might. I hope so. But this is a start,
anyway.”</p>
<p>“Yes, and a fine one,” said Ned Towner, enthusiastically.
“You’re a smart boy, Dave, and
everybody says so.”</p>
<p>“I wish my dear old father was living,” remarked
Dave in a tone of sadness and regret.
“There wasn’t much about sky sailing he didn’t
know. In these times, when everybody is so interested
in airships, he would be bound to make
his mark.”</p>
<p>The two, manly-appearing youths stood in the
loft of the dilapidated old barn of Silas Warner’s
place in Brookville. It held a work bench and
some tools, and on one end of the bench was the
model at which they were looking.</p>
<p><span class='pageno' title='2' id='Page_2'></span>It was neat enough and intricate enough, being
made by a mere lad, to have attracted the attention
of any inventor or workman. An outsider,
however, would have been puzzled, for
while its shape suggested a bird kite with an umbrella
top, it had so many rods, joints and levers
that a casual observer would have wondered
what they were all there for.</p>
<p>Dave showed a good deal of pride in his model.
It had cost him all his loose change to buy the
material to construct it, and many a busy hour
during the preceding few weeks. He sighed as
he turned from it, with the words:</p>
<p>“All I need now is some silk to cover those
wings. That finishes it.”</p>
<p>“Then what will you do?”</p>
<p>“Well,” replied Dave vaguely, “then I hope I
can find some practical airship man who will tell
me if it’s any good.”</p>
<p>“Say, it will be a fortune if it works, won’t it,
Dave?” exclaimed Ned.</p>
<p>“Oh, hardly that. They are getting up so
many new kinds all of the time. It would get
me into the swim, though. All I want is to have
a chance to make the acquaintance of some expert
airman. I reckon the flying fever was born
in me, Ned.”</p>
<p><span class='pageno' title='3' id='Page_3'></span>“Well, that’s quite natural,” responded Ned.
“Your father must have been famous in his line,
according to all those scrap-book articles you
showed me the other day.”</p>
<p>“Anyhow, I’m getting tired of the dull life
I’m leading here,” went on Dave seriously. “I’d
like to do something besides slave for a man who
drives me to the limit, and amount to something
in the world.”</p>
<p>“Good for you!” cried Ned, giving his friend
and chum an encouraging slap on the back.
“You’ll get there—you’re the kind of a boy that
always does.”</p>
<p>“Hey, there! are you ever going to start?”
rang out a harsh, complaining voice in the yard
outside.</p>
<p>Dave hurriedly threw an old horse blanket
over his model and glanced out of the
window.</p>
<p>“It’s Mr. Warner,” he said, while Ned made
a wry face. “I’ll have to be going.”</p>
<p>Old Silas Warner stood switching his cane
around and growling out threats, as Dave reached
the yard and crossed it to where a thin bony horse
and an old rickety wagon stood. The vehicle
held a dozen bags filled with potatoes, every one
of which Dave had planted and dug as his
hardened hands bore proof.</p>
<p><span class='pageno' title='4' id='Page_4'></span>“You’ll quit wasting my time, Dave Dashaway,”
carped the mean-faced old man, “or
there’s going to be trouble.”</p>
<p>“I was just showing Ned about the loft,” explained
Dave.</p>
<p>“Yah! Fine lot of more valuable time you’ve
been wasting there, too,” snorted old Warner.
“I’ll put a stop to some of it, you mark me.
Now then, you get those bags of taters down to
Swain’s warehouse and back again afore six
o’clock, or you’ll get no supper. There’s a lot
more of those taters to dig, but an hour or two
this evening will finish them.”</p>
<p>Dave’s face was set and indignant, but he
passed no more words with the unreasonable old
man who called himself, and was in fact, legally
his guardian.</p>
<p>“I’ll keep you company as far as our house,”
said Ned, as Dave got up into the wagon seat,
and he climbed up beside his friend, heedless of
the grumblings of the old man about over loading.</p>
<p>“He’s a pretty mean old fellow,” flared out
Ned, as they drove out of the yard and into the
country road leading towards the town. “It’s
the talk of the neighborhood, the way that old
miser makes you work.”</p>
<p>“I wouldn’t mind the work if he would only
treat me half human,” replied Dave in a subdued
tone.</p>
<p><span class='pageno' title='5' id='Page_5'></span>“It isn’t in him to do it,” scolded Ned. “If
I was in your place I’d just cut out, and let him
find some other fellow to do his slaving. Why,
my folks say your father left enough to take care
of you in a good way. And send you to school,
and all that. I’d find out my legal rights, if I
were you, and I’d fetch that old fellow to time.”</p>
<p>“It would be no use, Ned,” declared Dave.
“I tried it once. I went over to Brocton, where
the lawyer of my father’s estate lives, and had a
talk with him.”</p>
<p>“What did he say?”</p>
<p>“He said that my father had left no property
except the old hotel at Brocton. It is old, for a
fact, and needs lots of repairs, and the lawyer
says that this takes most of the income and makes
the rent amount to almost nothing. I found out,
though, that the lawyer is a relative of Mr.
Warner, and that Warner gives most of the repairing
jobs to other relatives of his. I went
and saw the court judge, and he told me that Mr.
Warner’s report, made each year, showed up
clear and straight.”</p>
<p>“Judge another relative of old Warner?” insinuated
Ned.</p>
<p>“I shouldn’t wonder.”</p>
<p>“Neither would I. It’s strange to me, though,
Dave, that your father ever made such a notorious
old skinflint your guardian.”</p>
<p><span class='pageno' title='6' id='Page_6'></span>“He didn’t,” asserted Dave.</p>
<p>“Who did, then?”</p>
<p>“The court, and I had no voice in it. Mr.
Warner let me stay at the school I was attending
when my father died, for about a year. Then
he claimed the estate couldn’t bear the expense,
and he has had me home ever since.”</p>
<p>“Why don’t they sell the old hotel, and give
you a chance to live like other boys who are
heirs?” demanded Ned, in his ardent, innocent
way.</p>
<p>“Mr. Warner says the property can’t be sold
till I am of age,” explained Dave. “That time
I went away and got work in the city, I even sent
Mr. Warner half of what I earned, but he sent
the sheriff after me, made me come home, and
said if I tried it again he would send me to a reformatory
till I was twenty-one.”</p>
<p>“Say that’s terrible!” cried Ned, rousing up
in his honest wrath. “Oh, say—look there!”</p>
<p>“Whoa!” shouted Dave, but there was no
need of the mandate. In sudden excitement and
surprise he had pulled old Dobbin up dead short.
Then he followed the direction indicated by the
pointing finger of his companion. Both sat staring
fixedly over their heads. The air was filled
with a faint whizzing sound, and the object that
made it came within their view for just a minute.
Then it passed swiftly beyond their range of
vision where the high trees lining the road intervened.</p>
<p><span class='pageno' title='7' id='Page_7'></span>“An airship—a real airship!” cried Ned with
bated breath.</p>
<p>“Yes. It must have come from the big aero
meet at Fairfield,” said Dave.</p>
<p>“Is there one there?”</p>
<p>“Yes. I read about it in the paper.”</p>
<p>Both Dave and Ned had seen an airship before.
Besides two that had passed over the town
the day previous, they had once witnessed an ascent
at a circus at Brocton.</p>
<p>Every nerve in Dave’s body was thrilling with
animation. He had dropped the lines, and Dobbin
had wandered to the side of the road seeking
for grass, nearly tipping over the load. Dave
righted the wagon.</p>
<p>“Say,” spoke Ned, “stop at the house, will
you?”</p>
<p>“What for?” inquired Dave.</p>
<p>“I want to ask the folks to let me go to town
with you.”</p>
<p>“I’ll be glad to have you, Ned.”</p>
<p>“All right. You know the common is right on
top of the hill, and one of the fellows said they
could watch the airships yesterday for miles and
miles.”</p>
<p>A turn in the highway brought the boys to the
Towner place. Ned ran into the house and soon
returned all satisfaction and excitement, his
pockets filled with cookies and apples.</p>
<p><span class='pageno' title='8' id='Page_8'></span>“Mother says I can go with you, Dave,” he
said. “I can help you unload, and we can drive
over to the town common and join the crowds.”</p>
<p>Dave’s head was full of airships, and the incident
of the hour made him forget his troubles.
He and Ned chatted and lunched animatedly all
the way to Brookville.</p>
<p>The business part of the little town was located
on a hill, as Ned had said, but they did not go
there at once. The warehouse where Dave was
to deliver his load of potatoes was near the railroad,
and there they drove.</p>
<p>They found no one in charge of the office, and
had to wait till the proprietor arrived, which was
nearly an hour later. It was quite six o’clock
before they got the potatoes unloaded. Then
Dave drove up the hill.</p>
<p>Quite a crowd was gathered in the public
square. The boys hitched old Dobbin near the
post office and joined the throng.</p>
<p>Everybody was talking airships. It seemed
that half-a-dozen had passed in full sight. Three
of them had sailed directly over the town. One
of them had dropped about a hundred printed
dodgers, telling about the aero meet at Fairfield,
and Dave was glad to get hold of one of
these.</p>
<p><span class='pageno' title='9' id='Page_9'></span>The excited throng was in great expectation of
the appearance of another airship. It was getting
on towards meal time, and quite a number
had left the common, when a chorus of sound
echoed out:</p>
<p>“A—ah!”</p>
<p>“There’s another one.”</p>
<p>“Hurrah—look! look!”</p>
<p>“A—a—ah!”</p>
<p>The last utterance expressed disappointment.
A swift sailing aeroplane had come into view,
circled, and was lost to sight over the crest of a
distant hill.</p>
<p>There was a great attraction for the chums in
the crowd and bustle about the common. It was
quite dusk before they started away. Dave realized
that he would have to account for every
minute of his time, and expected a scene when
he got back home. He had seen so much, however,
and heard so much talk on his favorite
theme, airships, that a glimmering idea came to
him that he was soon to know more of them.</p>
<p>Dave kept up his spirits bravely, and he and
Ned chatted over dreams and plans to find a
chance to get over to Fairfield some day soon, and
view all the glories of the great aero meet close
at hand.</p>
<p><span class='pageno' title='10' id='Page_10'></span>It had become quite dark by the time they
neared the turn in the road leading to the Towner
place. Old Dobbin was plodding along the dusty
road at his usual leisurely gait, when suddenly
Ned stretched out his hand and caught the arm of
his comrade in a great state of excitement.</p>
<p>“Whoa!” he cried. “Do you hear that,
Dave?”</p>
<p>“Sure enough,” responded Dave, checking the
horse, and both of them sat rigid on the wagon
seat and stared up into the sky.</p>
<p>“It’s another one of them,” said Ned.
“Listen.”</p>
<p>There was a quick snappy sound, like the sharp
popping of an exhaust.</p>
<p>There was a flashing streamer of light, outlining
a dark object that both the entranced lads
knew to be a belated airship making its way homeward.</p>
<p>At that moment something swished through
the air. Dave did not see it, he rather felt it.
Before his senses had fairly taken it in, however,
old Dobbin made a jump.</p>
<p>Ten feet ahead the slow going animal plunged,
as Dave had never seen him do before. Then
he made an affrighted veer. Over into the ditch
went the crazy old vehicle with a crash. Dave,
clinging to the seat, was simply flung sideways,
but his companion was lifted bodily. Head over
heels out of the wagon went Ned, landing sprawling
in the mud.</p>
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